Falcons coach still facing the heat

By GEORGE HENRYAssociated Press – published Tuesday, November 15, 2011

By sending Michael Turner up the middle for no gain, Smith might have doomed the Falcons to an overtime loss to New Orleans, but the fourth-year coach wasn’t surprised by the public’s response.

“I’ll say this, OK? We have passionate football fans here in Atlanta, OK?” Smith said with a smile. “Regardless of what the outcome is, someone has an opinion, and that’s great for your fan base. That’s what you want to have happen, and I’ll just leave it at that.”

Though the move backfired, Smith repeated his postgame stance from Sunday night — that he would do it again given the circumstances and the Falcons’ spotty history of defending Saints quarterback Drew Brees in the late stages of a game.

After watching film of the Falcons’ 26-23 defeat, Smith disputed reports that New Orleans guessed correctly on quarterback Matt Ryan’s snap count and thus had no trouble stopping Turner to set up John Kasay’s 26-yard, game-winning field goal four plays later.

“They didn’t jump the snap,” Smith said. “We didn’t execute on that play. I really don’t want to get into any more details than that.”

Smith pointed out that the offense converted a fourth-and-one with a similar power formation call late in the third quarter. Turner ran for 5 yards, and Jason Snelling caught a 21-yard touchdown pass on the next play to give the Falcons a 13-10 lead.

But Atlanta’s inability to consistently control the line of scrimmage throughout the game led to its ninth loss in the last 11 meetings with New Orleans.

A lack of pressure on Brees left the middle of the field open for the Saints to pick apart. The Falcons failed to record a sack and only hit Brees just twice. They blew coverages, too.

“The Saints did everything that we’ve seen on film and that we expected them to do,” linebacker Curtis Lofton said. “They just caught some guys out of position and what not.”

Defensive end Kroy Biermann wasn’t surprised that the Saints created extra time for Brees by chipping him and other pass rushers with tight ends and running backs. Brees, not surprisingly, completed 30 of 43 passes for 322 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions.

“Obviously, we didn’t get enough pressure on him,” Biermann said. “He could kind of sit back there a few times and was able to play pitch and catch with his receivers.”

Offensively, the problems were equally glaring. The Falcons failed to score a touchdown in three red-zone possessions against a New Orleans defense that ranked last in the NFL inside an opponent’s 20-yard line.

“Twice in the red zone we had a miscommunication in terms of what we were trying to get done with some protections and we had a free runner” bearing down on Ryan, Smith said. “I think you guys probably saw 94 (defensive end Cameron Jordan) coming off of our right side, but it really was not an issue with what they did. It was an issue of what we did. We didn’t execute very well in the red zone.”

Penalties hardly helped. The Falcons were flagged a season-high 12 times — four on offense, four on defense and four on special teams.

“Really, three of them were penalties that you just can’t have,” Smith said. “You can’t flip the field position on 15-yard penalties. One of them, we were able to overcome and ended up kicking a field goal on the first drive, but the other ones, we weren’t as successful in terms of overcoming them.”

Each little setback played a part in the predicament Atlanta found itself in by the 12th play of overtime.

Turner never had a chance.

“I had my choices between the holes I could hit if they were there, but they just came with the all-out blitz, guys shot the gap and things like that,” Turner said. “There really wasn’t anywhere to go. I just tried to try harder and give that great effort to get those couple of inches that we needed.”

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